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1.
Br J Clin Pharmacol ; 90(7): 1559-1575, 2024 Jul.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38752677

RESUMO

AIMS: The global older population is growing rapidly, and the rise in polypharmacy has increased potentially inappropriate medication (PIM) encounters. PIMs pose health risks, but detecting them automatically in large medical databases is complex. This review aimed to uncover PIM prevalence in individuals aged 65 years or older using health databases and emphasized the risk of underestimating PIM prevalence due to underutilization of detection tools. METHODS: This study conducted a broad search on the Medline database to identify articles about the prevalence of PIMs in older adults using various databases. Articles published between January 2010 and June 2023 were included, and specific criteria were applied for study selection. Two literature reviews conducted before our study period were integrated to obtain a perspective from the 1990s to the present day. The selected papers were analysed for variables including database type, screening method, adaptations and PIM prevalence. The study categorized databases and original screening tools for clarity, examined adaptations and assessed concordance among different screening methods. RESULTS: This study encompassed 48 manuscripts, covering 58 sample evaluations. The mean prevalence of PIMs within the general population aged over 65 years was 27.8%. Relevant heterogeneity emerged in both the utilized databases and the detection methods. Adaptation of original screening tools was observed in 86.2% (50/58) of cases. Half of the original screening tools used for assessing PIMs belonged to the simple category. About a third of the studies employed less than half of the original criteria after adaptation. Only three studies used over 75% of the original criteria and more than 50 criteria. CONCLUSIONS: This extensive review highlights PIM prevalence among the older adults, emphasizing method intricacies and the potential for underestimation due to data limitations and algorithm adjustments. The findings call for enhanced methodologies, transparent algorithms and a deeper understanding of intricate rules' impact on public health implications.


Assuntos
Bases de Dados Factuais , Prescrição Inadequada , Polimedicação , Lista de Medicamentos Potencialmente Inapropriados , Humanos , Idoso , Prescrição Inadequada/estatística & dados numéricos , Prevalência , Lista de Medicamentos Potencialmente Inapropriados/estatística & dados numéricos , Bases de Dados Factuais/estatística & dados numéricos
2.
J Biomed Inform ; 140: 104325, 2023 04.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36870586

RESUMO

Monoclonal antibodies (MAs) are increasingly used in the therapeutic arsenal. Clinical Data Warehouses (CDWs) offer unprecedented opportunities for research on real-word data. The objective of this work is to develop a knowledge organization system on MAs for therapeutic use (MATUs) applicable in Europe to query CDWs from a multi-terminology server (HeTOP). After expert consensus, three main health thesauri were selected: the MeSH thesaurus, the National Cancer Institute thesaurus (NCIt) and the SNOMED CT. These thesauri contain 1,723 MAs concepts, but only 99 (5.7 %) are identified as MATUs. The knowledge organisation system proposed in this article is a six-level hierarchical system according to their main therapeutic target. It includes 193 different concepts organised in a cross lingual terminology server, which will allow the inclusion of semantic extensions. Ninety nine (51.3 %) MATUs concepts and 94 (48.7 %) hierarchical concepts composed the knowledge organisation system. Two separates groups (an expert group and a validation group) carried out the selection, creation and validation processes. Queries identify, for unstructured data, 83 out of 99 (83.8 %) MATUs corresponding to 45,262 patients, 347,035 hospital stays and 427,544 health documents, and for structured data, 61 out of 99 (61.6 %) MATUs corresponding to 9,218 patients, 59,643 hospital stays and 104,737 hospital prescriptions. The volume of data in the CDW demonstrated the potential for using these data in clinical research, although not all MATUs are present in the CDW (16 missing for unstructured data and 38 for structured data). The knowledge organisation system proposed here improves the understanding of MATUs, the quality of queries and helps clinical researchers retrieve relevant medical information. The use of this model in CDW allows for the rapid identification of a large number of patients and health documents, either directly by a MATU of interest (e.g. Rituximab) but also by searching for parent concepts (e.g. Anti-CD20 Monoclonal Antibody).


Assuntos
Anticorpos Monoclonais , Vocabulário Controlado , Humanos , Anticorpos Monoclonais/uso terapêutico , Systematized Nomenclature of Medicine , Data Warehousing , Europa (Continente)
3.
BMC Med Inform Decis Mak ; 22(1): 34, 2022 02 08.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35135538

RESUMO

BACKGROUND: Unstructured data from electronic health records represent a wealth of information. Doc'EDS is a pre-screening tool based on textual and semantic analysis. The Doc'EDS system provides a graphic user interface to search documents in French. The aim of this study was to present the Doc'EDS tool and to provide a formal evaluation of its semantic features. METHODS: Doc'EDS is a search tool built on top of the clinical data warehouse developed at Rouen University Hospital. This tool is a multilevel search engine combining structured and unstructured data. It also provides basic analytical features and semantic utilities. A formal evaluation was conducted to measure the impact of Natural Language Processing algorithms. RESULTS: Approximately 18.1 million narrative documents are stored in Doc'EDS. The formal evaluation was conducted in 5000 clinical concepts that were manually collected. The F-measures of negative concepts and hypothetical concepts were respectively 0.89 and 0.57. CONCLUSION: In this formal evaluation, we have shown that Doc'EDS is able to deal with language subtleties to enhance an advanced full text search in French health documents. The Doc'EDS tool is currently used on a daily basis to help researchers to identify patient cohorts thanks to unstructured data.


Assuntos
Data Warehousing , Semântica , Registros Eletrônicos de Saúde , Humanos , Processamento de Linguagem Natural , Ferramenta de Busca
4.
Health Info Libr J ; 38(2): 113-124, 2021 Jun.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31837099

RESUMO

BACKGROUND: PubMed is one of the most important basic tools to access medical literature. Semantic query expansion using synonyms can improve retrieval efficacy. OBJECTIVE: The objective was to evaluate the performance of three semantic query expansion strategies. METHODS: Queries were built for forty MeSH descriptors using three semantic expansion strategies (MeSH synonyms, UMLS mappings, and mappings created by the CISMeF team), then sent to PubMed. To evaluate expansion performances for each query, the first twenty citations were selected, and their relevance were judged by three independent evaluators based on the title and abstract. RESULTS: Queries built with the UMLS expansion provided new citations with a slightly higher mean precision (74.19%) than with the CISMeF expansion (70.28%), although the difference was not significant. Inter-rater agreement was 0.28. Results varied greatly depending on the descriptor selected. DISCUSSION: The number of citations retrieved by the three strategies and their precision varied greatly according to the descriptor. This heterogeneity could be explained by the quality of the synonyms. Optimal use of these different expansions would be through various combinations of UMLS and CISMeF intersections or unions. CONCLUSION: Information retrieval tools should propose different semantic expansions depending on the descriptor and the search objectives.


Assuntos
Comportamento Apetitivo , PubMed/normas , Humanos , Armazenamento e Recuperação da Informação/métodos , Avaliação de Programas e Projetos de Saúde/métodos , PubMed/tendências , Semântica
5.
J Biomed Inform ; 94: 103176, 2019 06.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30980962

RESUMO

BACKGROUND: Extracting concepts from biomedical texts is a key to support many advanced applications such as biomedical information retrieval. However, in clinical notes Named Entity Recognition (NER) has to deal with various types of errors such as spelling errors, grammatical errors, truncated sentences, and non-standard abbreviations. Moreover, in numerous countries, NER is challenged by the availability of many resources originally developed and only suitable for English texts. This paper presents the Cimind system, a multilingual system dedicated to named entity recognition in medical texts based on a phonetic similarity measure. METHODS: Cimind performs entity recognition by combining phonetic recognition using the DM phonetic algorithm to deal with spelling errors and string similarity measures. Three main steps are processed to identify terms in a controlled vocabulary: normalization, candidate selection by phonetic similarity and candidate ranking. RESULTS: Cimind was evaluated in the 2016 and 2017 editions of the CLEF eHealth challenge in the CépiDC/CDC tasks. In 2017, it obtained on each corpus the following results: English dataset: 83.9% P, 78.3% R, 81.0% F1; French raw dataset: 85.7% P, 68.9% R, 76.4% F1; French aligned dataset: 83.5% P, 77.5% R, 80.4% F1. It ranked first in French and fourth in English in officials runs.


Assuntos
Processamento de Linguagem Natural , Fonética , Vocabulário Controlado , Algoritmos , Humanos
7.
BMC Med Inform Decis Mak ; 17(1): 94, 2017 Jul 03.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28673304

RESUMO

BACKGROUND: MEDLINE is the most widely used medical bibliographic database in the world. Most of its citations are in English and this can be an obstacle for some researchers to access the information the database contains. We created a multilingual query builder to facilitate access to the PubMed subset using a language other than English. The aim of our study was to assess the impact of this multilingual query builder on the quality of PubMed queries for non-native English speaking physicians and medical researchers. METHODS: A randomised controlled study was conducted among French speaking general practice residents. We designed a multi-lingual query builder to facilitate information retrieval, based on available MeSH translations and providing users with both an interface and a controlled vocabulary in their own language. Participating residents were randomly allocated either the French or the English version of the query builder. They were asked to translate 12 short medical questions into MeSH queries. The main outcome was the quality of the query. Two librarians blind to the arm independently evaluated each query, using a modified published classification that differentiated eight types of errors. RESULTS: Twenty residents used the French version of the query builder and 22 used the English version. 492 queries were analysed. There were significantly more perfect queries in the French group vs. the English group (respectively 37.9% vs. 17.9%; p < 0.01). It took significantly more time for the members of the English group than the members of the French group to build each query, respectively 194 sec vs. 128 sec; p < 0.01. CONCLUSIONS: This multi-lingual query builder is an effective tool to improve the quality of PubMed queries in particular for researchers whose first language is not English.


Assuntos
Armazenamento e Recuperação da Informação/normas , Multilinguismo , PubMed/normas , Humanos , Idioma , Bibliotecários , Tradução
8.
Am J Ind Med ; 59(3): 221-6, 2016 Mar.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26681491

RESUMO

BACKGROUND: Reliability and credibility of research conducted by industry have been questioned, including in the field of occupational health. METHODS: Cohort studies on occupational cancer published between 2000 and 2010 were compared according to their results, their conclusions, their funding, and the affiliation of their authors. RESULTS: Overall, 510 articles were included. Studies published by authors with public affiliation or funded by public grants concluded that their study showed an excess of cancer more frequently (P = 0.01) than studies published by authors with private affiliation or funded by private grants (88% [95%CI = 85-91] vs. 73% [95%CI = 56-88] and 92% [95%CI = 86-97] vs. 71% [95%CI = 57-84], respectively). Discrepancies between statistical results and conclusion occurred more frequently in articles written by authors from the private sector than from the public sector (42% [IC95% = 26-60] vs. 23% [IC95% = 18-26], P = 0.02). CONCLUSIONS: Industry affiliations of authors or industry support of studies are associated with the results of published studies on occupational cancer. The underlying mechanisms warrant further investigation.


Assuntos
Conflito de Interesses , Neoplasias , Doenças Profissionais , Pesquisadores , Apoio à Pesquisa como Assunto , Estudos de Coortes , Humanos , Indústrias , Reprodutibilidade dos Testes
9.
J Med Internet Res ; 16(12): e271, 2014 Dec 01.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25448528

RESUMO

BACKGROUND: PubMed contains numerous articles in languages other than English. However, existing solutions to access these articles in the language in which they were written remain unconvincing. OBJECTIVE: The aim of this study was to propose a practical search engine, called Multilingual PubMed, which will permit access to a PubMed subset in 1 language and to evaluate the precision and coverage for the French version (Multilingual PubMed-French). METHODS: To create this tool, translations of MeSH were enriched (eg, adding synonyms and translations in French) and integrated into a terminology portal. PubMed subsets in several European languages were also added to our database using a dedicated parser. The response time for the generic semantic search engine was evaluated for simple queries. BabelMeSH, Multilingual PubMed-French, and 3 different PubMed strategies were compared by searching for literature in French. Precision and coverage were measured for 20 randomly selected queries. The results were evaluated as relevant to title and abstract, the evaluator being blind to search strategy. RESULTS: More than 650,000 PubMed citations in French were integrated into the Multilingual PubMed-French information system. The response times were all below the threshold defined for usability (2 seconds). Two search strategies (Multilingual PubMed-French and 1 PubMed strategy) showed high precision (0.93 and 0.97, respectively), but coverage was 4 times higher for Multilingual PubMed-French. CONCLUSIONS: It is now possible to freely access biomedical literature using a practical search tool in French. This tool will be of particular interest for health professionals and other end users who do not read or query sufficiently in English. The information system is theoretically well suited to expand the approach to other European languages, such as German, Spanish, Norwegian, and Portuguese.


Assuntos
Armazenamento e Recuperação da Informação/métodos , Idioma , PubMed/estatística & dados numéricos , Ferramenta de Busca/estatística & dados numéricos , França , Humanos , Medical Subject Headings
10.
BMC Med Inform Decis Mak ; 14: 17, 2014 Mar 11.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24618037

RESUMO

BACKGROUND: Visualization of Concepts in Medicine (VCM) is a compositional iconic language that aims to ease information retrieval in Electronic Health Records (EHR), clinical guidelines or other medical documents. Using VCM language in medical applications requires alignment with medical reference terminologies. Alignment from Medical Subject Headings (MeSH) thesaurus and International Classification of Diseases - tenth revision (ICD10) to VCM are presented here. This study aim was to evaluate alignment quality between VCM and other terminologies using different measures of inter-alignment agreement before integration in EHR. METHODS: For medical literature retrieval purposes and EHR browsing, the MeSH thesaurus and the ICD10, both organized hierarchically, were aligned to VCM language. Some MeSH to VCM alignments were performed automatically but others were performed manually and validated. ICD10 to VCM alignment was entirely manually performed. Inter-alignment agreement was assessed on ICD10 codes and MeSH descriptors, sharing the same Concept Unique Identifiers in the Unified Medical Language System (UMLS). Three metrics were used to compare two VCM icons: binary comparison, crude Dice Similarity Coefficient (DSCcrude), and semantic Dice Similarity Coefficient (DSCsemantic), based on Lin similarity. An analysis of discrepancies was performed. RESULTS: MeSH to VCM alignment resulted in 10,783 relations: 1,830 of which were manually performed and 8,953 were automatically inherited. ICD10 to VCM alignment led to 19,852 relations. UMLS gathered 1,887 alignments between ICD10 and MeSH. Only 1,606 of them were used for this study. Inter-alignment agreement using only validated MeSH to VCM alignment was 74.2% [70.5-78.0]CI95%, DSCcrude was 0.93 [0.91-0.94]CI95%, and DSCsemantic was 0.96 [0.95-0.96]CI95%. Discrepancy analysis revealed that even if two thirds of errors came from the reviewers, UMLS was nevertheless responsible for one third. CONCLUSIONS: This study has shown strong overall inter-alignment agreement between MeSH to VCM and ICD10 to VCM manual alignments. VCM icons have now been integrated into a guideline search engine (http://www.cismef.org) and a health terminologies portal (http://www.hetop.eu).


Assuntos
Armazenamento e Recuperação da Informação/normas , Terminologia como Assunto , Vocabulário Controlado , Registros Eletrônicos de Saúde/normas , Humanos , Classificação Internacional de Doenças/estatística & dados numéricos , Medical Subject Headings/estatística & dados numéricos , Unified Medical Language System/normas
11.
JMIR Med Educ ; 10: e53997, 2024 04 30.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38693686

RESUMO

SaNuRN is a five-year project by the University of Rouen Normandy (URN) and the Côte d'Azur University (CAU) consortium to optimize digital health education for medical and paramedical students, professionals, and administrators. The project includes a skills framework, training modules, and teaching resources. In 2027, SaNuRN is expected to train a significant portion of the 400,000 health and paramedical professions students at the French national level. Our purpose is to give a synopsis of the SaNuRN initiative, emphasizing its novel educational methods and how they will enhance the delivery of digital health education. Our goals include showcasing SaNuRN as a comprehensive program consisting of a proficiency framework, instructional modules, and educational materials and explaining how SaNuRN is implemented in the participating academic institutions. SaNuRN is a project aimed at educating and training health-related and paramedics students in digital health. The project results from a cooperative effort between URN and CAU, covering four French departments. The project is based on the French National Referential on Digital Health (FNRDH), which defines the skills and competencies to be acquired and validated by every student in the health, paramedical, and social professions curricula. The SaNuRN team is currently adapting the existing URN and CAU syllabi to FNRDH and developing short-duration video capsules of 20 to 30 minutes to teach all the relevant material. The project aims to ensure that the largest student population earns the necessary skills, and it has developed a two-tier system involving facilitators who will enable the efficient expansion of the project's educational outreach and support the students in learning the needed material efficiently. With a focus on real-world scenarios and innovative teaching activities integrating telemedicine devices and virtual professionals, SaNuRN is committed to enabling continuous learning for healthcare professionals in clinical practice. The SaNuRN team introduced new ways of evaluating healthcare professionals by shifting from a knowledge-based to a competencies-based evaluation, aligning with the Miller teaching pyramid and using the Objective Structured Clinical Examination and Script Concordance Test in digital health education. Drawing on the expertise of URN, CAU, and their public health and digital research laboratories and partners, the SaNuRN project represents a platform for continuous innovation, including telemedicine training and living labs with virtual and interactive professional activities. The SaNuRN project provides a comprehensive, personalized 30-hour training package for health and paramedical students, addressing all 70 FNRDH competencies. The program is enhanced using AI and NLP to create virtual patients and professionals for digital healthcare simulation. SaNuRN teaching materials are open-access. The project collaborates with academic institutions worldwide to develop educational material in digital health in English and multilingual formats. SaNuRN offers a practical and persuasive training approach to meet the current digital health education requirements.


Assuntos
Educação em Saúde , Educação a Distância/métodos , Educação a Distância/tendências , Previsões , Educação em Saúde/tendências , Educação em Saúde/métodos
12.
JMIR Med Educ ; 10: e48393, 2024 Mar 04.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38437007

RESUMO

BACKGROUND: Access to reliable and accurate digital health web-based resources is crucial. However, the lack of dedicated search engines for non-English languages, such as French, is a significant obstacle in this field. Thus, we developed and implemented a multilingual, multiterminology semantic search engine called Catalog and Index of Digital Health Teaching Resources (CIDHR). CIDHR is freely accessible to everyone, with a focus on French-speaking resources. CIDHR has been initiated to provide validated, high-quality content tailored to the specific needs of each user profile, be it students or professionals. OBJECTIVE: This study's primary aim in developing and implementing the CIDHR is to improve knowledge sharing and spreading in digital health and health informatics and expand the health-related educational community, primarily French speaking but also in other languages. We intend to support the continuous development of initial (ie, bachelor level), advanced (ie, master and doctoral levels), and continuing training (ie, professionals and postgraduate levels) in digital health for health and social work fields. The main objective is to describe the development and implementation of CIDHR. The hypothesis guiding this research is that controlled vocabularies dedicated to medical informatics and digital health, such as the Medical Informatics Multilingual Ontology (MIMO) and the concepts structuring the French National Referential on Digital Health (FNRDH), to index digital health teaching and learning resources, are effectively increasing the availability and accessibility of these resources to medical students and other health care professionals. METHODS: First, resource identification is processed by medical librarians from websites and scientific sources preselected and validated by domain experts and surveyed every week. Then, based on MIMO and FNRDH, the educational resources are indexed for each related knowledge domain. The same resources are also tagged with relevant academic and professional experience levels. Afterward, the indexed resources are shared with the digital health teaching and learning community. The last step consists of assessing CIDHR by obtaining informal feedback from users. RESULTS: Resource identification and evaluation processes were executed by a dedicated team of medical librarians, aiming to collect and curate an extensive collection of digital health teaching and learning resources. The resources that successfully passed the evaluation process were promptly included in CIDHR. These resources were diligently indexed (with MIMO and FNRDH) and tagged for the study field and degree level. By October 2023, a total of 371 indexed resources were available on a dedicated portal. CONCLUSIONS: CIDHR is a multilingual digital health education semantic search engine and platform that aims to increase the accessibility of educational resources to the broader health care-related community. It focuses on making resources "findable," "accessible," "interoperable," and "reusable" by using a one-stop shop portal approach. CIDHR has and will have an essential role in increasing digital health literacy.


Assuntos
Saúde Digital , Semântica , Humanos , Ferramenta de Busca , Idioma , Aprendizagem
13.
BMC Med Inform Decis Mak ; 13: 7, 2013 Jan 09.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23302542

RESUMO

BACKGROUND: In searches for clinical trials and systematic reviews, it is said that Google Scholar (GS) should never be used in isolation, but in addition to PubMed, Cochrane, and other trusted sources of information. We therefore performed a study to assess the coverage of GS specifically for the studies included in systematic reviews and evaluate if GS was sensitive enough to be used alone for systematic reviews. METHODS: All the original studies included in 29 systematic reviews published in the Cochrane Database Syst Rev or in the JAMA in 2009 were gathered in a gold standard database. GS was searched for all these studies one by one to assess the percentage of studies which could have been identified by searching only GS. RESULTS: All the 738 original studies included in the gold standard database were retrieved in GS (100%). CONCLUSION: The coverage of GS for the studies included in the systematic reviews is 100%. If the authors of the 29 systematic reviews had used only GS, no reference would have been missed. With some improvement in the research options, to increase its precision, GS could become the leading bibliographic database in medicine and could be used alone for systematic reviews.


Assuntos
Armazenamento e Recuperação da Informação/métodos , Internet , PubMed
14.
BMC Med Inform Decis Mak ; 13: 101, 2013 Sep 03.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24004720

RESUMO

BACKGROUND: The objective of this study was to ascertain the performance of syndromic algorithms for the early detection of patients in healthcare facilities who have potentially transmissible infectious diseases, using computerised emergency department (ED) data. METHODS: A retrospective cohort in an 810-bed University of Lyon hospital in France was analysed. Adults who were admitted to the ED and hospitalised between June 1, 2007, and March 31, 2010 were included (N=10895). Different algorithms were built to detect patients with infectious respiratory, cutaneous or gastrointestinal syndromes. The performance parameters of these algorithms were assessed with regard to the capacity of our infection-control team to investigate the detected cases. RESULTS: For respiratory syndromes, the sensitivity of the detection algorithms was 82.70%, and the specificity was 82.37%. For cutaneous syndromes, the sensitivity of the detection algorithms was 78.08%, and the specificity was 95.93%. For gastrointestinal syndromes, the sensitivity of the detection algorithms was 79.41%, and the specificity was 81.97%. CONCLUSIONS: This assessment permitted us to detect patients with potentially transmissible infectious diseases, while striking a reasonable balance between true positives and false positives, for both respiratory and cutaneous syndromes. The algorithms for gastrointestinal syndromes were not specific enough for routine use, because they generated a large number of false positives relative to the number of infected patients. Detection of patients with potentially transmissible infectious diseases will enable us to take precautions to prevent transmission as soon as these patients come in contact with healthcare facilities.


Assuntos
Algoritmos , Doenças Transmissíveis/diagnóstico , Serviço Hospitalar de Emergência/estatística & dados numéricos , Sistemas Computadorizados de Registros Médicos/estatística & dados numéricos , Adulto , Idoso , Doenças Transmissíveis/classificação , Doenças Transmissíveis/epidemiologia , Diagnóstico Precoce , Serviço Hospitalar de Emergência/normas , Feminino , França , Humanos , Masculino , Sistemas Computadorizados de Registros Médicos/normas , Pessoa de Meia-Idade , Vigilância da População , Estudos Retrospectivos , Sensibilidade e Especificidade
15.
Front Digit Health ; 5: 1217694, 2023.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37497185

RESUMO

Background: Drug-related problems (DRPs) can lead to serious health issues and have significant economic impacts on healthcare systems. One solution to address this issue is the use of computerized physician order entry systems (CPOE), which can help prevent DRPs by reducing the risk of medication errors. Objective: The purpose of this study is to provide an analysis on scientific production of the past 20 years in order to describe trends in academic publishing on CPOE and to identify the major topics as well as the predominant actors (journals, countries) involved in this field. Methods: A PubMed search was carried out to extract articles related to computerized provider order entry during the period January 1st 2003- December 31st 2022 using a specific query. Data were downloaded from PubMed in Extensible Markup Language (XML) and were processed through a dedicated parser. Results: A total of 2,946 articles were retrieved among 623 journals. One third of these articles were published in eight journals. Publications grew strongly from 2002 to 2006, with a dip in 2008 followed by an increase again in 2009. After 2009, there follows a decreasing until 2022.The most producing countries are the USA with 51.39% of the publication over the period by France (3.80%), and Canada (3.77%). About disciplines, the top 3 is: "medical informatics" (21.62% of articles), "pharmacy" (19.04%), and "pediatrics" (6.56%). Discussion: This study provides an overview of publication trends related to CPOE, which exhibited a significant increase in the first decade of the 21st century followed by a decline after 2009. Possible reasons for this decline include the emergence of digital health tools beyond CPOE, as well as healthcare professionals experiencing alert fatigue of the current system. Conclusion: Future research should focus on analyzing publication trends in the field of medical informatics and decision-making tools to identify other areas of interest that may have surpassed the development of CPOE.

16.
Yearb Med Inform ; 32(1): 27-35, 2023 Aug.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38147847

RESUMO

OBJECTIVE: Planning reliable long-term planning actions to handle disruptive events requires a timely development of technological infrastructures, as well as the set-up of focused strategies for emergency management. The paper aims to highlight the needs for standardization, integration, and interoperability between Accident & Emergency Informatics (A&EI) and One Digital Health (ODH), as fields capable of dealing with peculiar dynamics for a technology-boosted management of emergencies under an overarching One Health panorama. METHODS: An integrative analysis of the literature was conducted to draw attention to specific foci on the correlation between ODH and A&EI, in particular: (i) the management of disruptive events from private smart spaces to diseases spreading, and (ii) the concepts of (health-related) quality of life and well-being. RESULTS: A digitally-focused management of emergency events that tackles the inextricable interconnectedness between humans, animals, and surrounding environment, demands standardization, integration, and systems interoperability. A consistent and finalized process of adoption and implementation of methods and tools from the International Standard Accident Number (ISAN), via findability, accessibility, interoperability, and reusability (FAIR) data principles, to Medical Informatics and Digital Health Multilingual Ontology (MIMO) - capable of looking at different approaches to encourage the integration between the ODH framework and the A&EI vision, provides a first answer to these needs. CONCLUSIONS: ODH and A&EI look at different scales but with similar goals for converging health and environmental-related data management standards to enable multi-sources, interdisciplinary, and real-time data integration and interoperability. This allows holistic digital health both in routine and emergency events.


Assuntos
Informática Médica , Saúde Única , Humanos , Qualidade de Vida , Gerenciamento de Dados , Padrões de Referência
17.
Int J Med Inform ; 170: 104976, 2023 02.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36599261

RESUMO

INTRODUCTION: The cytochrome P450 (CYP450) enzyme system is involved in the metabolism of certain drugs and is responsible for most drug interactions. These interactions result in either an enzymatic inhibition or an enzymatic induction mechanism that has an impact on the therapeutic management of patients. Detecting these drug interactions will allow for better predictability in therapeutic response. Therefore, computerized solutions can represent a valuable help for clinicians in their tasks of detection. OBJECTIVE: The objective of this study is to provide a structured data-source of interactions involving the CYP450 enzyme system. These interactions are aimed to be integrated in the cross-lingual multi-terminology server HeTOP (Health Terminologies and Ontologies Portal), to support the query processing of the clinical data warehouse (CDW) EDSaN (Entrepôt de Données de Santé Normand). MATERIAL AND METHODS: A selection and curation of drug components (DCs) that share a relationship with the CYP450 system was performed from several international data sources. The DCs were linked according to the type of relationship which can be substrate, inhibitor, or inducer. These relationships were then integrated into the HeTOP server. To validate the CYP450 relationships, a semantic query was performed on the CDW, whose search engine is founded on HeTOP data (concepts, terms, and relations). RESULTS: A total of 776 DCs are associated by a new interaction relationship, integrated in HeTOP, by 14 enzymes. These are CYP450 1A2, 2A6, 2B6, 2C8, 2C9, 2C18, 2C19, 2D6, 2E1, 3A4, 3A7, 11B1,11B2 mitochondrial and P-glycoprotein, constituting a total of 2,088 relationships. A general modelling of cytochromic interactions was performed. From this model, 233,006 queries were processed in less than two hours, demonstrating the usefulness and performance of our CDW implementation. Moreover, they showed that in our university hospital, the concurrent prescription that could cause a cytochromic interaction is Bisoprolol with Amiodarone by enzymatic inhibition for 2,493 patients. DISCUSSION: The queries submitted to the CDW EDSaN allowed to highlight the most prescribed molecules simultaneously and potentially responsible for cytochromic interactions. In a second step, it would be interesting to evaluate the real clinical impact by looking for possible adverse effects of these interactions in the patients' files. Other computational solutions for cytochromic interactions exist. The impact of CYP450 is particularly important for drugs with narrow therapeutic window (NTW) as they can lead to increased toxicity or therapeutic failure. It is also important to define which drug component is a pro-drug and to considerate the many genetic polymorphisms of patients. CONCLUSION: The HeTOP server contains a non-negligible number of relationships between drug components and CYP450 from multiple reference sources. These data allow us to query our Clinical Data Warehouse to highlight these cytochromic interactions. It would be interesting in the future to assess the actual clinical impact in hospital reports.


Assuntos
Sistema Enzimático do Citocromo P-450 , Data Warehousing , Humanos , Sistema Enzimático do Citocromo P-450/genética , Sistema Enzimático do Citocromo P-450/metabolismo
18.
BMC Bioinformatics ; 13 Suppl 14: S11, 2012.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23095521

RESUMO

BACKGROUND: The Internet is a major source of health information but most seekers are not familiar with medical vocabularies. Hence, their searches fail due to bad query formulation. Several methods have been proposed to improve information retrieval: query expansion, syntactic and semantic techniques or knowledge-based methods. However, it would be useful to clean those queries which are misspelled. In this paper, we propose a simple yet efficient method in order to correct misspellings of queries submitted by health information seekers to a medical online search tool. METHODS: In addition to query normalizations and exact phonetic term matching, we tested two approximate string comparators: the similarity score function of Stoilos and the normalized Levenshtein edit distance. We propose here to combine them to increase the number of matched medical terms in French. We first took a sample of query logs to determine the thresholds and processing times. In the second run, at a greater scale we tested different combinations of query normalizations before or after misspelling correction with the retained thresholds in the first run. RESULTS: According to the total number of suggestions (around 163, the number of the first sample of queries), at a threshold comparator score of 0.3, the normalized Levenshtein edit distance gave the highest F-Measure (88.15%) and at a threshold comparator score of 0.7, the Stoilos function gave the highest F-Measure (84.31%). By combining Levenshtein and Stoilos, the highest F-Measure (80.28%) is obtained with 0.2 and 0.7 thresholds respectively. However, queries are composed by several terms that may be combination of medical terms. The process of query normalization and segmentation is thus required. The highest F-Measure (64.18%) is obtained when this process is realized before spelling-correction. CONCLUSIONS: Despite the widely known high performance of the normalized edit distance of Levenshtein, we show in this paper that its combination with the Stoilos algorithm improved the results for misspelling correction of user queries. Accuracy is improved by combining spelling, phoneme-based information and string normalizations and segmentations into medical terms. These encouraging results have enabled the integration of this method into two projects funded by the French National Research Agency-Technologies for Health Care. The first aims to facilitate the coding process of clinical free texts contained in Electronic Health Records and discharge summaries, whereas the second aims at improving information retrieval through Electronic Health Records.


Assuntos
Algoritmos , Armazenamento e Recuperação da Informação , Informática Médica/métodos , Humanos , Internet , Idioma , Informática Médica/instrumentação , Vocabulário Controlado
19.
Occup Environ Med ; 69(8): 603-5, 2012 Aug.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22693268

RESUMO

OBJECTIVES: Most physicians have received only limited training in occupational medicine (OM) during their studies. Since they rely mainly on one 'general medical' journal to keep their medical knowledge up to date, it is worthwhile questioning the importance of OM in these journals. The aim of this study was to measure the relative weight of OM in the major journals of general medicine and to compare the journals. METHODS: The 14,091 articles published in the Lancet, the NEJM, the JAMA and the BMJ in 1997, 2002 and 2007 were analysed. The relative weight of OM and the other medical specialties was determined by categorisation of all the articles, using a categorisation algorithm, which inferred the medical specialties relevant to each MEDLINE article file from the major medical subject headings (MeSH) terms used by the indexers of the US National Library of Medicine to describe each article. RESULTS: The 14,091 articles included in this study were indexed by 22,155 major MeSH terms, which were categorised into 73 different medical specialties. Only 0.48% of the articles had OM as a main topic. OM ranked 44th among the 73 specialties, with limited differences between the four journals studied. There was no clear trend over the 10-year period. CONCLUSIONS: The importance of OM is very low in the four major journals of general and internal medicine, and we can consider that physicians get a very limited view of the evolution of knowledge in OM.


Assuntos
Bibliometria , Pesquisa Biomédica/estatística & dados numéricos , Medicina do Trabalho , Publicações Periódicas como Assunto/estatística & dados numéricos , Editoração/estatística & dados numéricos , Humanos , MEDLINE , Medical Subject Headings , National Library of Medicine (U.S.) , Editoração/tendências , Estados Unidos
20.
BMC Med Inform Decis Mak ; 12: 12, 2012 Feb 29.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22376010

RESUMO

BACKGROUND: PubMed is the main access to medical literature on the Internet. In order to enhance the performance of its information retrieval tools, primarily non-indexed citations, the authors propose a method: expanding users' queries using Unified Medical Language System' (UMLS) synonyms i.e. all the terms gathered under one unique Concept Unique Identifier. METHODS: This method was evaluated using queries constructed to emphasize the differences between this new method and the current PubMed automatic term mapping. Four experts assessed citation relevance. RESULTS: Using UMLS, we were able to retrieve new citations in 45.5% of queries, which implies a small increase in recall. The new strategy led to a heterogeneous 23.7% mean increase in non-indexed citation retrieved. Of these, 82% have been published less than 4 months earlier. The overall mean precision was 48.4% but differed according to the evaluators, ranging from 36.7% to 88.1% (Inter rater agreement was poor: kappa = 0.34). CONCLUSIONS: This study highlights the need for specific search tools for each type of user and use-cases. The proposed strategy may be useful to retrieve recent scientific advancement.


Assuntos
Armazenamento e Recuperação da Informação/métodos , Medical Subject Headings , PubMed , Unified Medical Language System/normas , Reprodutibilidade dos Testes , Interface Usuário-Computador
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